The Hollow Man

He does not signal his arrival with a knock upon the door.
I am not warned of his entry by footsteps sounding on the floor.
He is not accompanied by wraith-like wisps of mist.
Nor does he lean in close to give my cheeks a loving kiss.
There is no movement as he slides into the room.
I only realise he is present when overcome by gloom.
For he is a master of disguise,
Sidling up to me, out of sight of prying eyes,
Until he has taken up his place,
Occupying every single atom of my space,
Matching every feature, to cast a shadow on my face.
He reshapes my breath to turn each exhalation into a sigh,
And cries tears upon my heart to dowse the flames and cause the fire to die.
If I am sitting reading in a chair he squeezes in to look upon the words,
And twists their meanings so that they transform, grotesquely and absurd.
If I am gazing from the window to catch sight of nature’s green,
He draws a veil across my eyes to wipe away life’s vibrant sheen.
If I am setting out upon a chosen path,
He conjures fog so thick and heavy that I cannot find the start.
If I have hopes to pursue a long awaited plan,
He shows me every obstacle and challenge that he can.
He breaks the bridges of my imagination so that they have insufficient span.
He was with me yesterday.
He is The Hollow Man.
He does not ask if it is convenient for him to share my time.
I have no say in this, the choice is his, not mine.
He does not consider for one moment whether I would like him near,
For if he needs my space he takes it with no fear.
He gives no thought to any impact that he makes.
It’s up to him to choose the one he takes.
For he is a master of deceit,
And if he needs to feed then he will eat,
Until he has taken all he grips,
Draining arteries with a thousand sips,
Sucking out the marrow through his lips.
He gnaws away until my bones are stripped of meat,
And leaves the empty carcass in a heap.
When he is with me all I feel is rank despair
I try to look ahead but only find a vacant stare.
When he is with me I can see no hope,
I cannot move as I would like, my walk becomes a slope.
When he is with me there is only cloud,
And I would even welcome then a deathly shroud.
When he is with me there is nothing you can say,
For I am empty till he moves away.
There is no weapon you can use to end his stay.
He is The Hollow Man,
And he will have his day.
Yet, he will tire and then as softly as he came,
I find that he has slipped away to leave me with my fragile frame.
And if I search with care for what lies buried in the depths,
I find that he has not quite stripped me as I slept.
For there are embers that still burn though feebly bright,
That, tended gently, provide new warmth that brings a light.
For he is a master who will make his mark,
And from those tiny flames out jumps a spark,
Until it catches on the dried-out skin,
Taking hold to make new flames begin,
Exploding with the hidden energy within,
Then, bursting outwards as a firework on its arc,
Until the world no longer seems so dark.
There is no fanfare as he leaves his host,
He simply slips into the ether to become another haunting ghost.
There is no note to say farewell,
No threat that he’ll return to cast his spell.
But I expect that he’ll be back,
That he will claw his way inside once more to turn my soul to black.
And strangely though his visits cause much strain,
The gift he brings is worth the pain,
And even though I shudder at his name,
I know with certainty that he will come again.
He is the slaughterer,
The one who feeds upon the lamb.
He is the emptier,
The one who draws out all the poison that has spread across the land.
He is The Hollow Man,
And I must welcome his arrival,
For he is part of who I am.

(c) Tim O’Hare, August 2023


About this poem: I would say that I am usually in a fairly positive frame of mind, but every so often and always without any real warning I find that I have slipped into a deep state in which I have absolutely zero motivation and can see no point whatsoever in doing anything at all. I become uncommunicative, I mutter, I trudge. I know that I am in this state but I am powerless to change things; in fact, in the moment, I don’t want to. The best way that I can describe how I feel is empty or hollow. Over time I have learned that this down phase passes and usually I wake the next morning feeling back to normal, better even, than I did before the dip. My energy levels shoot back up and I feel more inspired. ‘The Hollow Man’ was written on such a morning. After a terrible dip the previous day I had spent an hour or so reading, gone for a short run and emerged from the shower with the first two lines of the poem in my head. As soon as I could, I stood at my whiteboard, wrote out those two lines and then followed the seam to chip out the whole of the first verse. At that point I was thinking that I should stop, but I soon found myself at the computer typing in that verse and then, over the next couple of hours, all of the rest of the poem tumbled out. At the outset I had no idea that the poem would ultimately become uplifting (well I think it is uplifting!) and perhaps even a little profound.

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